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Indonesia wasn’t feeling the love for Valentine’s Day on
Friday as authorities arrested couples in one city, scolded stores over condom
displays and warned students they would be reprimanded for amorous activities.
Makassar on Sulawesi island doled out some tough love with
raids at hotels and guest houses Thursday evening which netted about two dozen
unmarried offenders, including a German national.
“We caught the German with his Indonesian partner in a motel
and they weren’t husband and wife so that’s why we arrested them,” Iman Hud,
head of the local public order office, told AFP.
The unlucky lovers were quickly released after a lecture
about the evils of pre-marital sex, but five sex workers caught in the dragnet
would be sent to a rehabilitation centre, he added.
“These social illnesses must be prevented. We need to remind
the public to uphold our culture and ethics,” Hud said.
Valentine’s Day is controversial in parts of the majority
Muslim nation, with many Islamic clerics and conservative Indonesians
criticising its Western roots and what they say is its promotion of pre-marital
sex.
Still, many others practise a moderate form of Islam and
celebrate the day with chocolates and flowers for their loved ones, and
displays were set up at malls and cafés in the capital Jakarta.
Back in Makassar, however, authorities were checking to see
if shops had complied with an earlier warning not to sell condoms openly and
check identification cards to make sure buyers weren’t underaged.
“Condoms are for married adults,” public order chief Hud
said.
“They’re not supposed to be displayed and sold openly,
particularly near snacks for kids like chocolate.”
Makassar’s acting mayor Muhammad Iqbal Samad Suhae insisted
the measures were necessary to prevent his city from being paralyzed by rampant
sex and drug use.
“Festivities like Valentine’s Day usually attract youth,” he
added.
“That’s when they are out of control and doing things which
violate our norms and traditions, like consuming drugs and engaging in free
sex.
“We want to prevent that here.”
In Depok city near Jakarta, administrators warned students
against any Valentine’s romance under threat of unspecified sanctions for
violators.
Across the archipelago in conservative Aceh, the only region
in Indonesia that imposes Islamic law, a government circular called for
residents not to celebrate the romantic day and to report any violations.
The document also told restaurants, cafés and hotels not to
provide space for celebrations and asked clerics to deliver speeches on the
danger of Valentine’s Day.
The latest crackdown comes after the national government
last year backed off a bill that would have made pre-marital sex illegal.
AFP
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